It is not often that we publish a book that is clearly both unparalled and ground-breaking in its approach and contents. So it is with great pleasure that I announce the arrival of two such volumes, Paul Sillitoe's Built in Niugini and Made in Niugini are hugely detailed and illustrated discourses on Wola's built environment and material assemblage, and the associated skills and techniques. We could not ask for a better launch to the Royal Anthropological Institute Series.

Norm Whitten is one of the most renowned anthropologists of northern South America, and we feel privileged to publish his professional memoirs,Patterns Through Time, in which he offers and analyses his experiences in the discipline over more than half a century. A must-read for all anthropologists.

We are proud to present a fabulous first title for our Open Access list - Pilgrimage and Ambiguity: Sharing the Sacred is a remarkable collection presenting crucial analyses of ambiguity and coexistance that counter the prevalent narratives of religious intolerance. Edited by Angela Hobart and Thierry Zarcone, it is published in association with the Centro Incontri Umani, Ascona.

Open Access (link) - Sean Kingston Publishing is delighted to consider proposals for Open Access Publishing on a Gold Standard basis, under a Creative Commons Attribution v4.0 International License (CC BY), the most open license available, allowing readers to copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format, and to alter, transform, or build upon the material, including for commercial use, providing the original author is credited. In addition, such projects are published in print as a relatively low cost paperback. All projects vary, so please
contact us (link) for a quotation.

Paperbacks for Courses - Please don't be dissuaded from teaching any of our books because they are published in hardback. ALL our books are available in paperback for bulk orders when ordered from us direct. Just get your university bookshop to contact us (link) in good time with a course order and we can provide them with paperbacks affordable for students.

About Sean Kingston Publishing

In a field of multinational corporations, Sean Kingston Publishing is a family business, a small press specializing in high-quality academic texts within the social sciences, particularly anthropology. We published our first books in 2004, volumes by Marilyn Strathern, James Leach and Lawrence Kalinoe, and Alan Rumsey and James Weiner. Since that time, we have grown organically, establishing many long-lasting relationships with our partners (e.g. the Royal Anthropological Institute and the Centro Incontri Umani) and authors, and publishing more books each year on our own behalf, as well as assisting other organizations with their publications (e.g. The British Museum).

Dr Sean Kingston is a published and prize-winning anthropologist, and is personally involved in all books accepted for publication. He assesses every title himself, and each book is also submitted to peer review by experts on the topic. You will find him and our books at many anthropology conferences in Europe, and sometimes further afield. We have business relationships with some of the largest book distributors, and through them access the latest print-on-demand (POD) technology to print and market from the UK, the US and Australia.

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Reinventing
Craft in China

The Contemporary Politics of Yixing Zisha Ceramics

Geoffrey Gowlland

How does a craft reinvent itself as 'traditional' following cultural, social and political upheaval? In the township of Dingshu, Jiangsu province of China, artisans produce zisha or Yixing teapots that have been highly valued for centuries. Yet in twentieth-century socialist imagination, handicrafts were an anomaly in a modern society. The Maoist government had clear ambitions to transform the country by industrialization, replacing craft with mechanized methods of production. Four decades later, some of the same artisans identified as 'backward' handicraft producers in the 1950s and made to join workers' cooperatives, were now encouraged to set up private workshops, teach their children and become entrepreneurs. By the 2000s ceramic production in Dingshu is booming and artisans are buying their first cars, often luxury brands. However, many involvements of the Chinese state are apparent, from the control of raw materials, to the inscription of the craft on China's national list of intangible cultural heritage. In this perceptive study, Gowlland argues that this re-evaluation of heritage is no less inherently political than the collectivism of the communist regime. Reflecting that the craft objects, although produced in very different contexts, have remained virtually the same over time and that it is the artisans' subjectivities that have been transformed, he explores the construction of mastery and its relationship to tradition and authenticity, bringing to the fore the social dimension of mastery that goes beyond the skill of simply making things, to changing the way these things are perceived, made and talked about by others.

Gowlland takes his reader on a captivating journey into a world
of craftwork that has undergone seismic change since the era
of Chairman Mao. A combination of rich ethnography, refined
analysis and the author's hands-on understanding of the potter's
materials and techniques convincingly demonstrates that craft
knowledge and aesthetic appreciation are deeply embedded in
the political. This is a highly significant book for all scholars of craft
and material culture.Trevor Marchand, Emeritus Professor of Social Anthropology, School of Oriental and African Studies

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Built in Niugini

Constructions in the Highlands of Papua New Guinea

Paul Sillitoe

Vol. 1 of the RAI Series.

The sequel to the acclaimed Made in Niugini, which explored in unparalleled depth the material world of the Wola comprising moveable artefacts, Built in Niugini continues Paul Sillitoe's project in exemplary fashion, documenting the built environment, architecture and construction techniques in a tour de force of ethnography. But this is more than a book about building houses. Sillitoe also shows how material constructions can serve to further our understandings of intellectual constructions. Allowing his ethnography to take the lead, and paying close attention to the role of tacit understandings and know-how in both skilled work and everyday dwelling, his close experiential analyses inform a phenomenologically inflected discussion of profound philosophical questions - such as what can we know of being-in-the-world - from startlingly different cultural directions.

The book also forms part of a long-term project to understand a radically different 'economy', which is set in an acephalous order that extends individual freedom and equality in a manner difficult to imagine from the perspective of a nation-state - an intriguing way of being-in-the-world that is entwined with tacit aspects of knowing via personal and emotional experience. This brings us back to the explanatory power of a focus on technology, which Sillitoe argues for in the context of 'materiality' approaches that feature prominently in current debates about the sociology of knowledge. Archaeology has long been to the fore in considering technology and buildings, along with vernacular architecture, and Sillitoe contributes to a much needed dialogue between anthropology and these disciplines, assessing the potential and obstacles for a fruitful rapprochement.

Built in Niugini represents the culmination of Sillitoe's luminous scholarship as an anthropologist who dialogues fluidly with the literature and ideas of numerous disciplines. The arguments throughout engage with key concepts and theories from anthropology, archaeology, architecture, material culture studies, cognitive science, neuroscience and philosophy. The result is a significant work that contributes to not only our regional knowledge of the New Guinea Highlands but also to studies of tacit knowledge and the anthropology of architecture and building practices.Trevor Marchand, Emeritus Professor of Social Anthropology, School of Oriental and African Studies

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Made in Niugini

Technology in the Highlands of Papua New Guinea

Paul Sillitoe

Vol. 2 of the RAI Series.

This impressive and inspiring volume has as its modest origins the documentation
of a contemporary collecting project for the British Museum. Informed by curators'
critiques of uneven collections accompanied by highly variable information, Sillitoe
set out with the ambition of recording the totality of the material culture of the
Wola of the southern highlands of Papua New Guinea, at a time when the study of
artefacts was neglected in university anthropology departments. His achievements,
presented in this second edition of Made in Nuigini with a new contextualizing
preface and foreword, brought a new standard of ethnography to the incipient
revival of material culture studies, and opened up the importance of close attention
to technology and material assemblages for anthropology. The 'economy'
fundamentally concerns the material aspects of life, and as Sillitoe makes clear,
Wola attitudes and behaviour in this regard are radically different to those of the
West, with emphasis on 'maker users' and egalitarian access to resources going
hand in hand with their stateless and libertarian principles.

What a stunning and rewarding book! Te Rangi Hiroa, C.S. Ford, Darryl Forde, Clark Wissler and
Edward Gifford - to mention a few of my earlier friends and teachers - would all have enjoyed this
work immensely.Harold C. Conklin

Not many anthropologists could have brought to fruition a work like this. Its singleness of purpose
offers what amounts to a unique perspective on Papua New Guinea Highland life& It will be a
work of reference for Melanesianists. But social anthropologists in general should take note. The
relentlessness of Sillitoe's investigation has its own effect. It throws up quite unexpected detail: the
chert knappers' care that people will not cut their feet on fragments, the different times it takes
men to tease their hair into wigs, why barbed arrows are feared ... the number of skirts a woman
needs to feel adequately attired ... [A] magnificent epic to human endeavour. Regardless of
whether they hold collections from Melanesia, this should be in the library of every ethnographic
museum: and regardless of whether they think they are interested in material culture, this should be
available to every anthropology department.Marilyn Strathern, Man

Made in Niugini is an extraordinarily ambitious and finely executed account, encyclopaedic in scope and design, and expertly illustrated.Thomas G. Harding, American Anthropologist

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Patterns Through Time

An Ethnographer's Quest and Journey

Norman E. Whitten, Jr

For well over a half century, Norman Whitten has spent a third of his professional
life undertaking ethnography with Afro-Latin American and Indigenous peoples
living in tropical forest-riverine environments of northern South America. He has
spent the other two thirds engaged with theory construction in anthropology in
institutional settings. In this memoir, he tells of his contributions to ethnography as
a theory-constructive endeavor, and depicts an academic and practical
environment in which strong support exists, but where obstacles and strong
resistance must also be navigated.

Ethnographers construct theory within and sometimes against disciplinary
frameworks, working back and forth between explication and explanation to make
contributions to diverse and sometimes divergent literatures. This book traces
Whitten's career from graduate student through a long and productive career as
an anthropologist and ethnographer. Along the way, the reader gains valuable and
sometimes surprising perspectives on American anthropology from 1950s to the
present day, and insights into the different roles of the professional anthropologist.
Whitten poignantly describes and analyzes the wrenching experience of moving
from immersion in an Amazonian shamanic universe to administrative duties in a
dysfunctional academic setting. As a mentor, author and editor of prominent books
and journals, he highlights the importance of connecting a local study with the
wider world. As a museum curator, he argues that it is above all a deep connection
with living people that gives resonance to objects on display and agency to those
studied. Throughout, Whitten makes a resounding case for serious, longitudinal
ethnography as the foundation of anthropological theory, past, present and future.

Patterns Through Time offers a moral and intellectual compass for all those who are embarking, traveling, looking back upon, or otherwise navigating the journey from casual observer of human life worlds to engaged ethnographer and accomplished professional anthropologist. This thoughtfully crafted, imaginative, and powerfully written memoir by a respected elder with more than five decades of experience as an ethnographer, author, editor, and beloved mentor should be required reading for all anthropologists and anyone who cares about the future of the discipline's unique blending of scientific rigor and
humanistic values.Jonathan D. Hill, Professor of Anthropology, SIUC and President,
Society for the Anthropology of Lowland South America (2014-17)

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Pilgrimage and Ambiguity

Sharing the Sacred

Edited by Angela Hobart and Thierry Zarcone

'Ambiguous sanctuaries' are places in which the sacred is shared. These exist in
almost all religions: tombs of saints, mausoleums, monasteries and shrines, a
revered mountain peak, a majestic tree, a cave or special boulders in the river.
This book examines this phenomenon in diverse parts of the world: in Europe,
the Middle East, Asia and Brazil. What these ritual spaces share is the capacity
to unsettle and challenge people's experiences and understandings of reality,
as well as to provoke the imagination, allowing universes of meanings to be
interlinked.

The spaces discussed reveal the many different ways the sacred can be
shared. Different groups may once have visited sites that are nowadays linked
to only one religion. The legacy of earlier religious movements is subtly echoed
in the devotional forms, rituals, symbols or narratives (hagiographies) of
the present, and the architectural settings in which they take place. In some
pilgrimage sites, peoples of different faiths visit and take part in devotional
acts and rituals - such as processing, offering candles, incenses and flowers - that are shared. The saints to whom a shrine is dedicated can also have a
double identity. Such ambiguity has often been viewed through the lens of
religious purity, and the exclusivity of orthodoxy, as confusion, showing a lack
of coherence and authenticity. But the openness to interpretation of sacred
spaces in this collection suggests a more positive analysis: that it may be
through ambiguity transcending narrow confines that pilgrims experience the
sanctity and power they seek.

In the engaging and accessible essays that comprise Pilgrimage and Ambiguity the contributors consider the ambiguous forces that cohere in sacred spaces - forces that move us into the inspirational depths of human spirituality. In so doing, the essays bring us closer to a deeper appreciation of how ambigui ty helps to define the human condition. This collection is one that will be read and debated for many years to come.
Paul Stoller, West Chester University, Pennsylvania,
2013 Anders Retzius Gold Medal Laureate in Anthropology

'In a time of religious polarization, this fine collection of essays recalls that
ambiguity, ambivalence and shared experience characterize the sacred as it
is encountered in pilgrimages. Readers will travel through the Mediterranean,
India, Pakistan and China, but also Western Europe and Amazonia, to
discover saintly landscapes full of multiple meanings.' Alexandre Papas, Senior Research Fellow,
National Centre for Scientific Research, Paris

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Greek Island Life

Fieldwork on Anafi

Margaret E. Kenna

Sixteen months on a small Greek island? Not the holiday of a lifetime, but the start of anthropologist Margaret E. Kenna's involvement with the residents of Anafi and its migrant community in Athens. Greek Island Life gives a vivid and engaging account of research on Anafi in the 1960s, and is based on letters, progress reports, field-notes and diary entries made at the time. Since then the author has returned to the island many times and her later impressions and knowledge are integrated into the earlier texts. The islanders, who once regarded themselves to be so remote as to be 'far from God', are now making a living from tourism, marketing their island as an unspoilt idyll. Anyone interested in Greece and travel will find this book illuminating and captivating, as will students and teachers of anthropology, sociology, modern history, travel writing and Modern Greek studies.

'In the whole of the Cycladic and Sporadic groups there exists no island so remote in its solitude as Anafi' wrote the traveller Theodore Bent in the early 1880s: 'it is a mere speck in the waves in the direction of Rhodes and Crete, where no one ever goes, and the 1000 inhabitants of the one village are as isolated as if they dwelt on an archipelago in the Pacific.'

So Anafi remained until the mid 1960s when Margaret E. Kenna stepped ashore
to begin a memorable stay, and a lifetime's connection, described in this lovely
book. Full of wonderful observation, scrupulously honest, it would be compelling
simply as a travel book, but it is much more: it is a landmark study of the Greek
island world on the eve of the huge changes that would transform Greece by mass
tourism from the early 1970s, and it is all the more poignant now given the crises
currently engulfing the country.

All lovers of Greece will relish and admire this book for its insight, its realism and its humanity: a portrait of a world which is almost gone, but as Margaret Kenna shows in her updates, not quite yet.Michael Wood, Professor of Public History, Manchester University, and broadcaster

'This wonderful book counters the common accusation that anthropologists do such interesting things and then write boring books about them. This is a unique document, a narrative of fieldwork, written not retrospectively but in the actual ethnographic present, in lucid and lyrical prose worthy of Jane Austen. We the readers are invited to participate in the unfolding of events from Kenna s arrival to her departure, sharing in the first puzzles and initial descriptions of strangers who, by the end, become familiar figures and friends.' Judith Okely, Emeritus Professor of Social Anthropology, Hull University

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Tikopia Collected

Raymond Firth and the Creation of Solomon Islands Cultural Heritage

Elizabeth Bonshek

During 1928-9 the renowned anthropologist Raymond Firth visited Tikopia, a small island in the east of Solomon Islands, for the first time. This book takes the collection he made as its subject, and explores how through its acquisition, Firth ceased to be a stranger and became a respected figure incorporated into Tikopia society.

The objects were originally viewed by Firth as data in a scientific record of a culture, and evidence challenging the belief that complex economic transactions could only take place in a recognizable market economy. Elizabeth Bonshek, however, revisits the collection's documentation and the ethnography of Tikopia with a different intent in mind: to highlight the social relations the collecting process illuminates and to acknowledge Tikopia voices, past and present. She argues that Firth downplayed the impact of contact with outsiders - whalers, traders and missionaries calling for the abandonment of the Work of the Gods - yet this context is vital for understanding why local people actively contributed to his collecting and research. She follows the life of the collection after leaving the island in institutions that attributed different meanings to its significance, in a failed repatriation request and in a new role in the transmission of 'cultural heritage' along with Firth's writings. She concludes that Firth's exchanges of objects with other high-ranking men were culturally appropriate to the social values dominant in that time and place. Indeed, she suggests that while Firth was acquiring Tikopia artefacts, the Tikopia were perhaps acquiring him.

'On what ethical and economic terms does an anthropologist acquire other people's things? Collecting Tikopia deftly applies the insights of contemporary material culture studies to a historically important case. Bonshek coaxes ethnographic documents and museum artefacts to reveal how objects both materialize cultural identities over time and mediate social relations across worlds of difference.' - Professor Robert Foster, University of Rochester, President of the Society for Cultural Anthropology

'Richly supported by documentation this skilful and insightful analysis reveals the complexity of cross-cultural interactions and highlights important concerns for the interpretation and management of cultural heritage in museum 'treasure places' worldwide.' - Dr Robin Torrence, Senior Principal Research Scientist, Anthropology Research, Australian Museum

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Kitawa

The Thinking Hand and the Making Mind

Giancarlo Scoditti

Sketching and carving both visualize and memorize a given image, but within Nowau
culture the manner in which this is achieved in a canoe prowboard is entirely different
than in a conventional drawing. When studying the impressive ceremonial canoes of
Kitawa, in the Milne Bay Province of Papua New Guinea, G.M.G. Scoditti became
struck by the absolute predominance of the artist's mind in the process of creating
images: all its stages, its uncertainties and experimentation, must unfold within its
silent, rarefied space. Only once fully formed can the image be revealed to the village
in material form.

Reflecting on the absence of orthographic writing within Nowau culture, and
finding parallels with poetic and musical composition, Scoditti gained further insight
into the Nowau processes of creation through the critiques the Kitawan carvers made
of his own fieldwork sketchbooks. Spurred on by their curiosity, the anthropologist
handed over his art materials to the master carvers to make their own drawings on
paper or cardboard. Traditional pigments used on the polychrome canoe prowboards
were added to the unfamiliar media of watercolour, acrylic, coloured pencils and
ballpoint pen. Three-dimensional ornamentation became two-dimensional as images
of self-decoration and huts were added to those of prowboards. This exercise
was all the more fascinating given the prohibition of drawing on the surface of the
wood before carving. On return to Italy, further graphic dialogues unfolded when an
architect and an artist from the tradition of Italian Abstraction responded with their
own intriguingly different interpretations of the canoe prowboard and its relationship
to the Nautilus shell. All these drawings are brought together in this book, along with
Scoditti's own sketches from fieldwork and ethnographic collections in Newcastle
upon Tyne and Rome.

'The fieldworker's or museum ethnographer's sketches are never going
to be quite the same. Through the double filter of Kitawan philosophy and
Scoditti's ruminations, the apparently simple triad of sketch - drawing
- carving opens out into a discourse on the creative mind. The Kitawan
creator - here primarily the male carver - does not have to demonstrate
how he creates, and what springs from these pages have a fascination
of their own. Several distinctive hands, Kitawan and Italian, reflect from
different interpretive and professional vantage points on the very process
of drawing through doing exactly that, drawing. The result is images that
delight and challenge, sensitively assembled, beautifully reproduced. An
extraordinary record of creativity, and a rare corpus of visual memorials'Professor Dame Marilyn Strathern, University of Cambridge

CONTENTS:
THE CARNET OF A MELANESIAN CULTURE; THE DRAWINGS: The drawings made by Kitawans: Canoes and their ornaments; Self-decoration; Huts; Nowau classification of colours: Giancarlo M.G. Scoditti's 'graphic memories': The George Brown Collection, Newcastle upon Tyne; The Lamberto Loria Collection, 'Museo preistorico ed etnografico L. Pigorini', Rome; Field research on Kiriwina and Kitawa Islands; Graphic interpretations of ceremonial-canoe prowboards by Alveraldo A.G. Scoditti and Giulia Napoleone: The graphic interpretation of the cognitive schema of the prowboards by Alveraldo A.G. Scoditti; The graphic interpretation of the prowboards' figures by Giulia Napoleone; List of figures; Artists.

G.M.G. Scodittiis Emeritus Professor of Ethnology at the Department of Classical Archaeology and History of Ancient Art, University of Urbino in Italy.

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Mikidadi

Individual Biography and National History in Tanzania

Pat Caplan

This is the extraordinary story of Mikidadi, an ordinary Tanzanian from a remote coastal island, who became a Koran-school teacher, charity leader, environmental activist and guardian of an extended family. But this biography is not only about Mikidadi's life and legacy, but also his times. He lived through transitions from colonialism to independence, socialism to neoliberalism, a single- to a multi-party state, and a local Swahili Islam to a more globalized and politicized form. He also experienced the growth of corruption, and the increasing role of Western NGOs and Islamic charities. In considering how wider historical processes impacted on Mikidadi, as life got progressively harder for his family, this book seeks to counter some of the recent rewriting of Tanzania's post-colonial history.

Skilfully moving through the decades, between events at national, regional and individual levels, between three generations, and even adding a further layer of her own life as an anthropologist, Caplan succeeds in writing an engaging, accessible account that will appeal to both academics and students. For at the centre of this book is an unlikely friendship that began in 1966 between a 12-year-old boy and a 23-year-old woman, and lasted nearly four decades, to be cut short by Mikidadi's untimely death in 2002. Recollections of meetings, and extracts from fieldwork notes and correspondence, bring a lively immediacy to this exchange, in which profound cultural differences between researcher and researched are transcended in interconnected lives.

'An unprecedented ethnographic analysis of contemporary Tanzanian history exploring how individuals, families and communities over time perceive, act, negotiate and strive to adjust in the shade of shifting political, economic and ideological conditions' - Kjersti Larsen, Professor, Museum of Cultural History, University of Oslo

'Clear, engaging, and insightful, this accessible biography provides a rich entry point into African history and anthropology through an intimate account of life in a coastal East African village.' - Christine J. Walley, Professor of Anthropology, Director of Graduate Studies, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

'This clear and well-written book celebrates a life and its place in history. It is an exemplar of public anthropology' - David Zeitlyn, Professor of Social Anthropology, University of Oxford

CONTENTS:
Introduction: Mikidadi, the anthropologist and this book; Chapter 1: The search for education: The 1960s; Chapter 2: Education continued, forestry training and first job: The 1970s; Chapter 3: Getting married and starting a family: The 1980s; Chapter 4: Pursuing a livelihood and becoming an activist:The 1990s; Chapter 5: Seeking pathways to Mafia's development: The new millennium; Chapter 6: Mikidadi's death and its aftermath: 2003-10; Conclusion: Changes since 1965 and Mikidadi's legacy; Afterword: A personal note; References; List of places and people; Glossary of Swahili terms; Index.

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The Politics of Distinction

African Elites from Colonialism to Liberation in a Namibian Frontier Town

Mattia Fumanti

Scholarly definitions of elites as those who wield political power and control
distribution of resources in their locales consistently leave out their capacity to
shape morality, civic ethics and the legitimacy of power relations beyond material
domination. In this insightful ethnography of Rundu, a frontier town in Namibia,
Mattia Fumanti highlights the fundamental contribution elites make to the public
space through their much-praised concept of civility and their promotion of nationbuilding
at the local level. In centring his argument on the moral agency of elites
over three generations and their attempts to achieve distinction in public life, this
book counters an often found and over-generalized view of postcolonial African
states as weak, ruling through authoritarian, greedy and corrupt practices.

By looking at the intricate ways in which the biographies of a middle-range
town and its inhabitants are interwoven, this study draws very different conclusions
from the grand narratives of pathologies, chaos and crisis that characterize much of
the accepted discourse of African urbanization derived from the study of large cities.
Focusing on how generational relations between elites have both shaped, and are
shaped by, the transitions from apartheid and civil war to independence and postindependence,
the book illuminates public debates on the power of education, the
aspirations of youth, the role of the state and citizen, delivery of good governance
and the place of ethnic and settler minorities in post-apartheid southern Africa.

'This book is a vibrant antidote to Afro-pessimism and views that emphasize
the spectacle of disaster, kleptomania and corruption of the weak
state. By examining the rhetoric of public morality Fumanti challenges
this but is, nevertheless, also critical of the ruling elite. This is a
sophisticated and nuanced analysis of how small-town elites emerge
and how they see the world, a group of people who are potentially
vital players in the evolving shape of African cultures and moralities,
who have not received the scholarly attention they deserve.'

Robert Gordon, University of Vermont and University of the Free State

'The Politics of Distinction tackles a perennial anthropological subject with immense brio. Using the most contemporary of social theories and ethnographic methods, Mattia Fumanti addresses the enduring but elusive nexus of inter-generational consciousness and of the ambivalences between generations. That the two generations in this Namibian border town see themselves as the architects and inheritors of liberation imbues their provincial relations with echoes of grand history. Anyone interested in African elite formation, post-colonial governance, and the dividends and distinctions of education, or simply looking for a finely crafted contemporary ethnography, will find Fumanti's a compelling narrative.'

Richard Fardon, Professor of West African Anthropology at SOAS

CONTENTS:
Acknowledgements; Introduction; PART I - FROM COLONIALISM TO LIBERATION: Chapter 1: Rundu: A frontier town; Chapter 2: The politics of distinction: Leadership, passion and morality; Chapter 3: The liberation elite: Building public life in post-apartheid Rundu; Chapter 4: Sacralizing education: Rituals of distinction in post-apartheid Namibia; PART II - AFTER LIBERATION: THE YOUTH ELITE: Chapter 5: Inheriting an establishment: The youth elite and intergenerational dialectics; Chapter 6: The Shinyewile Club: Networks, social capital and the pursuit of distinction; Chapter 7: Youthful palindromes; Chapter 8: Straddling the rural-urban divide: Exchange and civility; Epilogue: Back to the future: Old and new elites twenty years after independence; References; Index.

Mattia Fumantiis Lecturer in Social Anthropology at the University of St Andrews. He has conducted anthropological research in Namibia, Ghana and the UK.

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Copyright Africa

Edited by Ute Röschenthaler and Mamadou Diawara

Africa is known for its multi-faceted immaterial culture, manifested in its highly original music, oral texts, artistic
performances and sporting events. These cultural expressions have become increasingly regulated by intellectual
property (IP) rights, as orally transmitted stories are written down, traditional songs broadcast and ownership
claimed, and sporting activities once part of village life become national media events. This volume brings together
an interdisciplinary team of legal experts, anthropologists and literary scholars to explore, from a local African point
of view, what happens to intangible cultural goods when they are confronted with large-scale commodification and
distribution through media technologies, and defined by globalized and divergent judicial systems, institutions and
cultural norms.

These transformations are observed in diverse cultural products from Senegalese wrestling contests to beauty
pageants in Mali, from Kenyan hip-hop to the Nigerian novel, from the vuvuzela to Cameroonian masks. Contributors
address the role of the state and the colonial legacy of the European origination of IP laws, as well as the forms
of ownership, technologies of mediation and degrees of commercialization that existed pre-colonially in different
African societies, recognizing that performances in most societies have always been embedded in economic activities
and exchange networks. Resisting a single narrative of the imposition of a Western, external legal regime displacing
older African modes, these local studies open up a more complex picture of the intricate interconnections among
pirates, artists, communities, governments and international organizations. They argue that it is only when local
actors embrace technologies and regulations in a specific historical situation that these become influential forces for
change. The question raised is not whether international IP norms conform to African practices, nor whether media
impose a Western style, but rather what local actors do with these regulations and how both local and Western
practices and technologies impact on each other and co-exist.

'Intellectual property (IP) has become central to global governance but we have little idea of how this international legislation plays out on the
ground. Drawing on case studies from South Africa, Kenya, Cameroon, Nigeria, Mali and Senegal, this pioneering book shows how local actors use
IP rather than the other way around. A must-read for anyone interested in intellectual property.'

Isabel Hofmeyr, Visiting Global Distinguished Professor, New York University and Professor of African Literature, University of the Witwatersrand

'A deeply engaging and evidence-rich analysis of the worlds into which intellectual property law, specifically copyright law, has entered in Africa and its effect on these worlds. This collection illustrates the best of what edited volumes can do: create a diverse, informed, and compelling conversation about a specific yet complex topic.'

Ute Röschenthaleris Professor at the Johannes Gutenberg University of Mainz; Scientific Collaborator in the
Cluster of Excellence 'The Formation of Normative Orders' and the project 'Africa's Asian Options' (AFRASO) at Goethe University, Frankfurt.

Mamadou Diawarais Professor of Anthropology at the Goethe University Frankfurt; Principal Investigator at the
Cluster of Excellence, Deputy Director of the Frobenius Institut; Founding Director of Point Sud, The Center for
Research on Local Knowledge, Bamako, Mali.

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Anthropology at
the Crossroads

The View from France

Edited by Sophie Chevalier

Vol. 1 of the RAI Country Series.

The influence of French intellectual thought on anthropology worldwide
has been immense. This set of outstanding essays examines the influence
of Lévi-Strauss, internal debates concerning anthropology's place within
French culture, the way that anthropologists in France approach the
dilemmas of practising in a globalized world, and the shifting relationship
between anthropology and museums. They also contain a highly stimulating
discussion of how anthropology 'at home' has a particular trajectory in
France. Together, they allow us to appreciate better why France has been
such a stimulating laboratory for anthropological thought and why it is likely
to remain so in the future. Indeed, leading figures have emerged there not
only because of the brilliance of French academic culture, but also because
of a specific readiness to combine an interest in public life and philosophy
with anthropology.

'A splendid volume: extremely informative and very clearly written. The
editor and the authors are to be congratulated on the way they have
worked up the material into a coherent account of the contemporary
French anthropological scene. It provides a model for subsequent
works in the series, and a model too in general for how to make a
collection of essays into a good book.'

Tim Jenkins, Reader in Anthropology and Religion, University of Cambridge

'This compelling book provides rich insight into the traditions and institutions of French anthropology, and a unique perspective on the new theoretical approaches that are shaping the discipline's renewal after Lévi-Strauss.'

Marc Abélès, Director of Research, CNRS Director of Studies, EHESS

CONTENTS:
Contributors; Introduction: Accommodating globalization - Sophie Chevalier; Chapter 1: Anthropology in France today: A view from within - Sophie Chevalier and Emmanuelle Lallement; Chapter 2: Lévi-Strauss and his heirs - Emmanuel Désveaux; Chapter 3: The contemporary turn of anthropology: (Still) endeavouring to understand the world
around us - Michel Agier; Chapter 4: The rise and fall of French 'anthropology at home': (With some reference to Britain) - Sophie Chevalier; Chapter 5: Can French anthropology outlive its museums?: Notes on a changing landscape - Benoît de L'Estoile; Chapter 6: Ethnologists and the city: A history of an object and of disciplines - Emmanuelle Lallement; Chapter 7: Métissage and kinship: Two key concepts in the study of diaspora - Anne-Christine Trémon; Index.

Sophie Chevalier, the editor of these essays, has long played a leading
part in organizing and publishing French anthropology, as president of one
of its professional associations, an instigator of the first unified national
association for anthropology and founding editor of the multimedia online
journal, ethnographiques.org. Here she has brought together prominent French
anthropologists and some younger scholars to show that anthropology there
is responding creatively to domestic institutional pressures as well as to the
challenges of globalization.

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Beyond Tradition,
Beyond Invention

Edited by Diana
Espírito Santo and Anastasios Panagiotopoulos

Afro-Cuban religiosity is likely to bring to mind beliefs and practices with a visibly
'African' flavour - music, dance, spirit possession, sacrifices and ritual language
that have undergone a transformation, on Cuban soil, under a strong Spanish and
Catholic influence. Much anthropological work has analysed Afro-Cuban religion's
'syncretic' character in the light of these European influences, taking as a given that
each tradition is relatively independent, and focusing on well-documented origins in
specific socio-historical environments. In this context, understandings of religious
innovation based on charismatic leaders have resulted in a top down approach.

However, this volume argues that there are alternatives to cult-centred accounts,
by looking at the relationships between Afro-Cuban traditions, and indeed going
beyond 'traditions' to place the focus on creativity as an embedded logic in everyday
religious practice. From this forward-looking perspective, ritual engagement is no
longer a means of recreating pre-existing universes but rather of generating, as
well as participating in, an ever-emerging cosmos. Traditions are not perceived
as given doctrines or mental constructs but as perceptual habits and potencies
beyond questions of spirit or matter, mind or body. Offering a fresh, improvisatory
ethnographic vision, this book recasts the Afro-Cuban religious complex in the
terms of the experts and adepts who creatively sustain it and responds to the
significant fact, often overlooked or ignored, that many Cubans engage with more
than one tradition without any sense of conflict.

'Beyond Tradition, Beyond Invention shows how far scholarship has transcended
the verificationist searches for origins, reification of traditions as bounded entities,
and sterile quests for typological coherence that, for too long, dominated the
anthropology of Afro-Caribbean ritual praxis. The contributions not only vividly
exemplify how mechanistic conceptions of tradition and cultural change, or
pseudo-problems such as syncretism, can be overcome by ethnographic means.
They also point towards novel theories of the ever emergent, hence thoroughly
historical, nature of worlds shared by humans, deities, and spirits. This book ought
to inspire all anthropologists working on complex and 'inventive' ritual traditions.'

Stephan Palmié, Professor of Anthropology, The University of Chicago

'Amidst the cacophony of calls to 'creativity' and 'innovation' as cultural commodities, here's a remarkable collection about the power of creation as a condition of human existence, rather than just its outcome. If you want to see what the world might be like without the very distinction between creator and creation - or, for that matter, between human beings and the worlds they inhabit - then look at Afro-Cuban religious traditions, the editors tell us. The sheer vivacity of the material is astounding, and suggests altogether new ways to think about not just the classic concerns of Caribbean anthropology with syncretism and cultural borrowings, but also basic categories of anthropological thinking such as ritual, technology, myth and cosmology.'

Martin Holbraad, Professor of Social Anthropology, University College London

OUT NOW IN PAPERBACK!

Pacific Alternatives

Cultural Politics in Contemporary Oceania

Edited by Edvard Hviding and Geoffrey White

At the centre of this collection are the actors and processes referred
to by the distinguished Oceania thinker and visionary Epeli Hau'ofa as
'ordinary people ... who, because of the poor flows of benefits from the
top, scepticism about stated policies and the like, tend to plan and make
decisions about their lives independently, sometimes with surprising
and dramatic results that go unnoticed or ignored at the top'. The
contributors explore innovative social, cultural and political responses
to global processes as they influence and unfold in a range of Pacific
locations - with a major focus on Island Melanesia and a further range
of contributions on Palau, Pohnpei, Rotuma and Australia. A multidisciplinary
group, including a number of Pacific Islanders, the authors
present contemporary connections between expanding perceptions
of cultural heritage and the emergence of new political forms, in the
context of challenges posed by the global political economy. At issue
in the volume are viable local Pacific alternatives to the institutions and
practices commonly advocated in development discourse, but difficult to
implement in Pacific settings.

'Pacific Alternatives provides fresh perspectives on the ways that cultural
heritage serves as a unique source of engaging the modern state and
global non-state actors. The volume showcases two of the strongest
features of contemporary Pacific Studies scholarship: the ability to find
new insights in experience-near analyses of Islander life that have world-enlarging
potentials, and the foregrounding of Indigenous voices in the
evolving dialogue around land, politics, culture, tradition, custom, and
identity.'

Ty Kawika Tengan, Professor of Anthropology & Chair of the Dept. of Ethnic Studies, University of Hawai'i

Edvard Hviding is Professor of Social Anthropology at the University of Bergen. His research in Solomon Islands includes interests in environmental knowledge, social movements, maritime practice and regional systems past and present.

Geoffrey White is Professor of Anthropology at the University of Hawai'i, Manoa.
His research in Solomon Islands includes interests in Christianity, cultural policy and
memory of the Second World War.

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The Ways of the World

European Representations of Other Cultures: From Homer to Sade

Peter Mason

Before the emergence of anthropology around the middle of the nineteenth
century, there was no ethnography as such. But the discipline owes its formation
to certain strands that go back into the remoter past of the ancient world, as
far back as Homeric epic, and range over such themes as the Greek views of
non-Greeks and indeed of the boundaries of what it is to be human.

These classical structural polarities have provided an enduring interpretative
framework for configuring the 'other' in very different societies and places.
Reaching across a remarkable time span, Mason's approach does not attempt
a unified narrative, but uses case studies from the ancient world, the early
modern era and the Enlightenment, many of them related to the difficulties of
comprehending the cultures of the New World, to pinpoint startling continuities
and changes. In this way, Mason reveals 'embedded ethnographies' in the works
of a diverse set of writers, from giants of their age such as Sextus Empiricus,
Columbus, Montaigne, the Marquis de Sade and Goethe, to little-known authors
of the sixteenth century such as Jan Huygen van Linschoten (tales of sex
and drugs in Goa) and Adriaen Coenen (encountering Eskimos in The Hague).
Drawing his conclusions from a wealth of sources, the author deftly moves
from travellers' accounts, encyclopaedias, cosmographies and natural history
compilations, to literary works of fiction, translating them from seven languages.
Many are presented here to English readers for the first time. Whether non-
European peoples are demonized or idealized, the author asks, can any trace
of a native voice still be found in these European texts?

'An outstanding work by a scholar with an eye for extraordinary case
studies and unexpected cultural connections, which contribute to opening
up new paths of research and reinvigorate the field.'

Francisco Bethencourt Charles Boxer Professor of History, King's College London

'The Ways of the World is an elegant, lucid, exemplary piece of intellectual history by an author who is as much at home in philosophy and literary criticism as he is in anthropology and history.'

CONTENTS:
Preface; Introduction: Questions of method; PART I - GREEK POLARITIES: Chapter 1: The tobacco that Pliny smoked; Chapter 2 Para-ethnography, scepticism and relativism: Outlines of Pyrrhonism; PART II - SIXTEENTH-CENTURY SINGULARITIES: Chapter 3: Hermeneutics of the other: Montaigne and Columbus; Chapter 4 'Were a man of iron or steel...': Sex and drugs in sixteenth-century Goa; Chapter 5: These are people who eat raw fish; PART III - THE ENLIGHTENMENT AND ITS DISCONTENTS: Chapter 6: Theatres of cruelty; Chapter 7 Dress, nudity and body painting at the ends of the world; Conclusion: Distancing, displacement, disguise; Index.

Peter Mason is an independent scholar based in Rome. He has written widely on
European representations of the New World, combining insights from cultural history,
art history and anthropology with in situ research in Latin America.

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Repositioning Pacific Arts

Artists, Objects, Histories

Edited by Anne E. Allen

with Deborah B. Waite

In investigating both customary and modern Pacific art, these collected essays present a wide-ranging view across time and space, taking the reader from antiquities to contemporary art and travelling across the region from Australia, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, New Zealand to Samoa. Studies of artefacts and traditions, such as self-portraiture, wood carvings, shields, tapa, dance and masks, use a variety of approaches, some deriving from museum studies while others are based on field investigation. Together they reveal the oppositional tensions between tradition and innovation, and the inspiration this provides for contemporary artistic practice, either through conscious implementation or through rejection of past definitions. Engagement with these cultural performances and objects provide new possibilities for the creation of current identities.

The drafting of antiquities legislation, the tortuous journeys objects have taken to find a place in galleries, the use of exhibitions in cultural exchange, framed by the architecture of museums, as well as the role of film and photography in appropriating Pacific art culture for emerging nationalisms, all of these are considered here to enhance our understanding of indigenous art's place in the world today. These historical perspectives provide the framework in which to explore contemporary acquisition and outreach work with Pacific communities that seeks to reconnect people with objects taken away from the places and intentions of their makers. Questions of how identity is maintained and expressed through art are considered for both individuals and groups. What role does the transformations of objects play in this process? What impacts have been made by colonialism, modernism and the great migrations of people between Pacific countries, and from rural to urban environments? Ultimately, how is 'Pacific Islander' defined and by whom?

In Repositioning Pacific Arts, artists, curators and academics, including Maori and other Islanders, bring fresh approaches to Oceanic Art History and raise questions of relevance not only to scholars of indigenous art in the region but also in other parts of world.

Anne E. Allen is Professor of Fine Arts at Indiana University, Southeast. Her research considers the spatial dynamics of Samoan vernacular architecture. She is currently the editor of Pacific Arts: The Journal of the Pacific Art Association.

Deborah B. Waite is Professor of Pacific Art History in the Department of Art and Art History, University of Hawai i. Her research speciality involves art from the Solomon Islands.

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Westermarck

Edited by David Shankland

Occasional Paper No. 44 of the Royal Anthropological Institute. Published in association with the Anglo-Finnish Society.

Westermarck was a remarkable man, but one who has
received little credit for the significant part he played in the
creation of modern anthropology. He spanned two worlds:
the comparative anthropological endeavours of the nineteenth century, and the
establishment of social anthropology at the LSE, in which he played a major role. One of
Malinowski's principal teachers, he was himself an outstanding fieldworker. His work on
Morocco has, even today, hardly been surpassed. Yet, his theories on the nature of human
marriage and the origins of the incest taboo place him firmly in the earlier, generalist camp,
and the controversies to which they have given rise have hardly settled down to this day.
In this volume, Westermarck's place in anthropology is discussed, along with detailed
descriptions of his very active academic life in Finland and in Britain, whilst other chapters
consider his equally pioneering writings in morals and ethics. Westermarck's own writings
are featured by way of illustration of his ideas, including his LSE inaugural lecture, his
Huxley lecture, and a hitherto unpublished paper on ritual and survivals. This volume
shows, indeed, that Westermarck is a 'missing link' in today's history of anthropology, and
our understanding of that history will be profoundly changed by a better appreciation of
his role within it.

David Shankland is Director of the Royal Anthropological Institute, and Reader in Anthropology at the University of Bristol. Amongst his specialist areas of study are the history of anthropology, particularly disciplinary diversity and the emergence of Social Anthropology in the twentieth century.

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The Things We Value

Culture and History in Solomon Islands

Edited by Ben Burt and Lissant Bolton

The Things We Value takes as its subject the creativity and cultural heritage of Solomon Islands, focusing on the kinds of objects produced and valued by local communities across this diverse country in the south-west Pacific. Combining historical and interpretive analyses with personal memories and extensive illustrations, the contributors examine such distinctive forms as red feather-money, shell valuables, body ornaments, war canoes, ancestral stones and wood carvings. Their essays discuss the materials, designs, manufacture, properties and meanings of artefacts from across the country. Solomon Islanders value these things variously as currency, heirlooms and commodities, for their beauty, power and sanctity, and as bearers of the historical identities and relationships which sustain them in a rapidly changing world. The volume brings together indigenous experts and leading international scholars as authors of the most geographically comprehensive anthology of Solomon Islands ethnography yet published. It engages with historical and contemporary issues from a range of perspectives, anthropological and archaeological, communal and personal, and makes a major new contribution to Pacific Islands studies.

'Since Malinowski, anthropologists have known that valued objects of various kinds are of vital significance in Melanesian societies. Ranging over exchange-valuables, customary 'money', woven and carved objects to contemporary art, this book draws together cases past and present from across the Solomon Islands in a sophisticated and illuminating way.'

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Keeping the Faith

Syriac Christian Diasporas

Heidi Armbruster

Indigenous Christian communities in Turkey and the Middle East
have declined dramatically in recent years, with large numbers
emigrating in the face of violence, war and conflict. Keeping
the Faith explores the impact of historical persecution and massmigration
on the Suryoye, Syriac Orthodox Christians, from
Turkey. Victims of genocide in 1915-16, subjugated by state
nationalism in the Turkish Republic, part of the Turkish exodus
of guest workers to Europe post 1960 and hemmed in by the
Turkish-Kurdish conflict in the last decades of the twentieth
century, they dispersed globally from eastern Anatolia. Only a
few now remain in Turkey.

This book argues that these experiences migrated with those
who re-settled abroad and became incorporated into their life
story. Heidi Armbruster's ethnographic fieldwork both in rural
villages and a monastery in their Anatolian homeland, and with
migrants and their families in Berlin and Vienna, allows her to
investigate a number of contexts in which Syriac Christians
create identities for themselves, contested through the potent
symbolic resources of the Aramaic language, Christian religion,
and Assyrian and Aramean ethnicity.

Suryoye personal relationships to a collective history are
not accessed through historians' accounts or institutional
narratives, but through the intimate social worlds the author
sensitively observes, in which experience and memories are
formed, and in which individuals articulate their stake in a larger
and more collective story. This discourse centres on 'community
endangerment' and lies at the heart of negotiations of identity,
family and group membership that are key to the spatial and
historical processes of migration and diaspora. This account
delineates with wonderful clarity how 'keeping the faith', has
both imperilled and formed the foundations of continuity and
community, for this fascinating group.

OUT NOW!

The Line of Dust

Bororo Culture between Tradition, Mutation and Self-representation

Massimo Canevacci

In this volume Massimo Canevacci draws on ethnographic fieldwork carried out together with Bororo of the Mato Grosso (Brazil), in particular Kleber Meritororeu, to examine the tensions, conflicts and exchanges between transformation and tradition. The practical as well as political keyword in his approach is self-representation. From this follows the incorporation of Bororo subjectivities into the text, and the focus on the emotional, philosophical and sacred aspects of their famous funeral ritual, in which their status as both performers and the interpreters is emphasized by their use of the digital camera.

The book takes its name from the line of dust laid down by a mestre dos cantos (master of chants), José Carlos Kuguri, between the anthropologist and himself: both a representation of an immaterial boundary, and a syncretic challenge to understand the transfiguration from a dead individual corpse to a living ancestral skull, an arara. Canevacci's answer is an assemblage of different narratives, in which an 'astonished' methodology of sensorial concepts, emotional photos and innovative logics traverses the entire Bororo funeral. He finds there is no dualism to life and death for the Bororo, but rather a porous, continuous transit and mixing of body and corpse, of humans and animals, of plants and deities; and that their sacred cosmology is time and again created and recreated via their wailing songs and circular dances, skin scarifications and bone painting. Their rituals are no mere repetition of tradition. They are also an attempt to respond to the changes inside and outside their aldeia (village), and to reenact their shifting cultures, subjectivities and identities.

Massimo Canevacci is Professor of Cultural Anthropology, Digital Arts and Culture at the University of Rome La Sapienza and Visiting Professor at the Institute of Advanced Study of the University São Paulo (IEA-USP). In 1995 he received The National Order of the Cruzeiro do Sul (Southern Cross) from the President of the Federal Republic of Brazil for his research.

OUT NOW!

Hearing and the Hospital

Sound, Listening, Knowledge and Experience

Tom Rice

An original ethnography of sound and listening in one of our major institutions, Hearing and the Hospital reveals the hospital to be a space in which several modes of listening are simultaneously in play and in which different layers of auditory knowledge and experience coexist. Engaging with Sound Studies, the Anthropology of the Senses, Medical Anthropology and Science and Technology Studies in this volume, Tom Rice shows how sound and listening produce, articulate and mediate social relations inside the hospital, how listening acquires direction and focus within that environment, and how certain sounds become endowed with particular meanings and associations. He also exposes many of the sensory minutiae that both underpin and undermine the production of medical knowledge and skill. Hearing and the Hospital creates an acoustic interrogation of hospital life, and in doing so questions accepted ideas about the sense of hearing itself.

'There's a great deal to admire in Tom Rice's ethnography of
the aural politics of the hospital. First because it represents
a unique conjunction of the ethnography of sound and
senses with medical anthropology and social studies of
science. Next because it patiently details how sound as
a way of knowing so deeply informs social practices of
medical listening. And finally because it is so successful in
revealing both how hospitals and bodies pulse as acoustic
spaces, and how patients and doctors professionalize,
personalize, and participate as situated listeners.'

Steven Feld, Distinguished Professor of Anthropology and Music, University of New Mexico

Tom Rice is is Lecturer in Anthropology at the University of Exeter, and specializes in auditory culture. As well as writing and teaching on sound he has produced audio pieces including the BBC Radio 4 feature The Art of Water Music.

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The Anthropology of Persianate Societies Vol. 2

Les Lions en Pierre Sculptée chez les Bakhtiari

Pedram Khosronejad

This impressive work of scholarship brings together anthropology, religion, popular culture, and history in its focus on Bakhtiari lion tombstones that have remained largely unknown and hence little studied. Although lions have long figured in Iranian history, art and myth as symbols of rulership, power, religious leadership or as steadfast guardians, art historians have tended to concentrate their attentions on court traditions and the role of lions in popular culture, especially in religion, has remained little considered until this book.

Funerary stone lions are to be found throughout western Iran, but are concentrated in the summer and winter pasture areas of the Bakhtiari, today's provinces of Chahar Mahal and Bakhtiari, west of Isfahan, and Khuzistan.

This highly illustrated colour volume draws on meticulous fieldwork and includes over three hundred photographs, drawings, charts and maps. The recording of this rare sculptural heritage, dating from the 16th century to the early 20th century, has become ever more pressing as some tombstones have been taken from their original settings and re-erected in parks, others damaged by the elements and some recently broken up to be used in road repairs.

'Pedram Khosronejad's Les Lions en Pierre Sculptée chez les Bakhtiari is to be greatly welcomed... [It is ]based on extensive fieldwork and represents something of a rescue project....This volume, however, goes further in raising three inter-related issues: why have these important artifacts been neglected even by specialists; how do they relate to a richer understanding of Iranian art and culture; and how does vernacular art relate to the accepted traditions of Iranian art?.... This volume will prove to be important in bringing the lion tombstones to a larger public attention.'

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The Making of Asmat Art

Indigenous Art in a World Perspective

Nick Stanley

Why has Asmat art, from a remote and small south-coast West Papuan society, had such a significant and prolonged impact on the world stage? This book explores the way major collections were made and examines the motivations of the collectors, their relationships with those from whom they purchased and the circumstances of the exchange. It also considers the involvement of artists and film-makers, anthropologists, representatives of the civil authorities and missionaries. Asmat artists have maintained their unique appeal through constant stylistic innovation and by engagement with new publics, both locally and internationally, as exemplified by the recent displays of women's weaving alongside the men's carved wooden
shields, drums and figures. Despite accelerating social changes, Asmat art continues to thrive as
a compelling and transformative Melanesian presence in the global art world.

'Awe-inspiring works of Asmat art loom large in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York and in
dozens of other great museums around the world. Nick Stanley's engagingly written study provides the
best history to date of the making of Asmat art traditions and of their avid acquisition by successive
European and north American collectors. Most importantly, the book foregrounds the creativity and
imagination of Asmat artists themselves. This is a book that will be welcomed by everyone interested in
the arts of the Pacific.'

Nick Stanley is an Honorary Research Fellow, Department of Africa, Oceania and the Americas, The British Museum and Emeritus Professor and former Director of Research, Birmingham Institute of Art and Design, Birmingham City University.

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How Democracy Works

An Ethnographic Theory Of Politics

Marcio Goldman

In this book, Marcio Goldman provides an interpretation of a 'big' theme - the functioning of a modern political system - based on the ethnographic analysis of a 'small' one - the political involvement of a group of African-Brazilian people living in the town of Ilheus in the north-east of Brazil, and belonging to Afro-Brazilian religions, black movement factions, families and neighbourhoods. By giving a description 'from the native's point of view' he leads us to a truly anthropological perception of modern democracies, showing how we need to take seriously the actions and the reflections of those generally viewed as passive, manipulated, ignorant and not really interested in the political game. Only this can lead us to an 'ethnographic theory of politics'.

'A ground-breaking work of real importance - not only to the anthropology of politics, but to the continuing development of theory and epistemology in anthropology and the social sciences at large.'

'Goldman has masterfully analysed the terrain of politics in this town, illuminating not only its local specifics.... but what he calls the 'constitutive ambiguities' of democracy in Brazil - and indeed of democracy as a whole. In the process he robustly challenges various accepted wisdoms about poor people's political choices, gives new life to classic anthropological ideas like 'segmentation', and strips away the veil that, for many of us, obscures 'how democracy works'. He achieves this ambitious task with consummate skill, combining fine-grained detail with bold theoretical insight.'

Deborah James, London School of Economics

'If the intellectual contemplation of collectively instituted irrationality is what got anthropology going in the first place, then it must, at some point, address such entities as politicians, and why people vote for them. Read this book and learn.'

Marcio Goldman s Associate Professor in the Postgraduate Programme of Social Anthropology at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro (National Museum, Brazil), and a researcher for the Brazilian National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq) and for the Estado do Rio Foundation for the Support of Research (FAPERJ). He is the author of Razăo e Diferença: Afetividade, Racionalidade e Relativismo no Pensamento de Lévy-Bruhl (1994); Alguma Antropologia (1999). Como Funciona a Democracia: Uma Teoria Etnográfica da Política was originally published in Brazil in 2006 to great acclaim. In this translation, this groundbreaking book is brought to the English speaking world for the first time.

OUT NOW!

We Don't Do Dots

Aboriginal Art and Culture
in Wilcannia, New South Wales

Lorraine Gibson

What does it mean when whites say that certain
Australian Aboriginal people have 'no culture' but
accept that they have art? Why are notions and
images of Aboriginal art and culture still
dominated by those from the centre and north of
the Australian continent, even though most
Aborigines reside in the south-east? This book
explores these questions, why they matter, and to
whom they matter.

It draws on extensive fieldwork with Barkindji Aboriginal people in the small
country town of Wilcannia, New South Wales. The richly textured ethnographic
analysis examines how notions of Aboriginal art and Aboriginal culture are wielded
as weapons of power in everyday racism in Australia. In so doing, it demonstrates
how Aboriginal people deploy ideas of art, artists and culture to assert individual
and group identity, and to subvert dominant culture ideas and ideals which operate
as tools of oppression, distancing and harm.

'At the heart of Gibson's fascinating study is a conundrum: Wilcannia
Aboriginal art is flourishing although Aboriginal culture is said to be nonexistent.
She has produced an engaging and challenging account of social life
as well as a serious analysis of deeply fraught relationships among the
townspeople. The numerous photographs and paintings make this a rich and
exciting publication.'

Lorraine Gibson's research has explored contemporary Aboriginal identity and the way it is expressed, understood and valued by both Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal people. Appointed to a Research Fellowship at the Australian Museum, Sydney in 2006, she went on to curate the exhibition 'Life on the Darling' at the museum in 2008/9, bringing the art of the Barkindji before a national and international audience. Recipient of the prestigious Vice Chancellor's Innovation Research Fellowship at the Centre for Research on Social Inclusion (CRSI), Macquarie University, from 2008-10, the author is currently working with Aboriginal women and children in Alice Springs' Town Camps who are affected by alcohol and volatile substance misuse.

OUT NOW!

Iranian Sacred Defence Cinema

Religion, Martyrdom and National Identity

Edited by Pedram Khosronejad

While the cinema of post-revolutionary Iran is internationally acknowledged, the world outside Iran has been ignorant
of the Iranian war films that are the subject of this pioneering book. Over 200 Iranian feature films concentrating
primarily on fighting and military operations have appeared since the 1980s and the beginning of the war between
Iran and Iraq. This book presents a detailed exploration of the 'Sacred Defence cinema' established by Seyed Morteza
Avini, a cinema that directly connects this war to the faith and religious belief of volunteer guardians of the revolution.
These films remain the primary vehicles of the Islamic state in Iran for the preservation and memorization of the
theme of martyrdom. As the distinguished film scholar, Hamid Dabashi writes in his Foreword to the book: 'If national
cinemas are predicated on national traumas, in the volume that Pedram Khosronejad has put together we are at the
heart of Iranian cinema.'

The eight-year Iran-Iraq war near the end of the 20th century renewed the horrors of the First World War near the start of the century - causing millions of casualties and untold devastation on both sides. It also resulted in a vigorous and dynamic cinematic output in Iran, producing some of the most ardent Islamist political movies, Shii-inflected spiritual films, and original theorization of what constitutes an ' Islamic cinema' . Khosronejad has managed to amass an astute and fascinating anthology - the first in English - that brings together an international roster of scholars to deal with the complexities and varieties of war fiction films, documentaries, television series and auteur directors.

Pedram Khosronejad is a Research Fellow in the Department of Social Anthropology at the University of St Andrews and the editor of several publications: The Art and Material Culture of Iranian Shi'ism (2011) and Unburied Memories: The Politics of Bodies, and the Material Culture of Sacred Defense Martyrs in Iran (2011).

NEW IN PAPERBACK!

Contesting the State

The Dynamics of Resistance and Control

Edited by Angela Hobart and Bruce Kapferer

The state is frequently conceived as a universal, although one apparently extraordinarily difficult to define. It often appears in academic discourse and, especially, in the popular imagination as an abstraction, usually nebulous, grasped as pervasive - a spectre to be feared. In this book, distinguished scholars from around the world take issue with this purported universality, exploring alternative imaginings of the state, of power and of global processes at the margins

Taking an anthropological perspective based in diverse ethnographic contexts marginal to Europe and North America, if not beyond their controlling influence in globalizing realities, this volume reveals different complexes of power, as well as processes that are external to power and often against it (contra Foucault, and as Pierre Clastres has famously argued).

The authors stress not only the different structures of institutional power, but also the persistence or transmutation of local kinds of power and their relevant cosmologies into contemporary globalized settings. They find innovative kinds of modernity, reconfigurations that have effects that cannot be reduced to over-generalized and often intensely Eurocentric concepts of power and the kinds of subjectivities realized by them. In this, the volume opens up the diversity of experiences of the state and offers new directions for its study.

CONTENTS:
Acknowledgements; Contributors; Introduction: Forces in the production of the state - Bruce Kapferer and Christopher C. Taylor; Chapter 1: The phenomenology of a stateless society: Non-dualism, identity and hierarchical anarchy among the Nuer - T.M.S. Evens; Chapter 2: Society against the tyrant: Power, violence and the poetics of an Amazonian egalitarianism - Joanna Overing; Chapter 3: Tribalism and power in Iraq: Saddam Hussein' s 'house' - Hosham Dawod; Chapter 4: An altered state?: Continuity, change and cosmology in Rwandan notions of the state - Christopher C. Taylor; Chapter 5: Post-war realities in Sri Lanka: From the crime of war to the crime of peace in Sri Lanka? - Bruce Kapferer and Roshan de Silva Wijeyeratne; Chapter 6: The Hindu epics, theatre and the Indonesian state: Violence and cosmic regeneration - a Balinese perspective - Angela Hobart; Chapter 7: The death of divine kingship in Nepal: Nepal's move from autocratic monarchy to fragile republican state - Bal Gopal Shrestha; Chapter 8: Expectations of the state: An exile returns to his country - Laurie Kain Hart; Chapter 9: Diametric to concentric dualism: Cosmopolitan intellectuals and the re-configuration of the state - Jonathan Friedman; Index.

Angela Hobart is Director of the Centro Incontri Umani, Ascona, Switzerland, and a Research Fellow, Medical Anthropology Department, University College London, UK.

Bruce Kapferer is Professor in the Department of Social Anthropology at Bergen University, Norway, Adjunct Professor at James Cook University, Australia and Honorary Professor at University College London, UK.

OUT NOW!

The Anthropology of Persianate Societies Vol. 1

Saints and their Pilgrims in Iran and Neighbouring Countries

Edited by Pedram Khosronejad

The importance and ramifications of saints, sainthood and pilgrimage in contemporary Iran and neighbouring countries are great, yet the academic conceptualizations of them and their entailments are sorely lacking. This book places the saints and their pilgrims in sharper focus, and offers important correctives to all-too-common Western misunderstandings, the foremost of which is the erroneous portrayal of Islam as primarily a body of legal doctrine and corresponding practice, and the associated principle that we can 'know' Islam if we 'know' Islamic law.

In an effort to challenge such a limited, and limiting, perspective, this volume suggests that both anthropology, insofar as it can focus on experience and practice, and history, insofar as it can encompass more than an institutional/political 'names and dates' discourse, can reveal something of the dynamism of the faith, as more than the sum of its laws. The approaches demonstrated in this book on Shiite Pilgrimage offer windows into the beliefs and lives of 'ordinary' people, past and present, and thereby bring forth agendas akin to those of 'subaltern studies'. Finally, the memorializing documented in these chapters provides evidence, past and present, of widespread desires for a more concrete, even immanent, relationship that is direct, unmediated and, at least partly, involves forms of intercession - even though such desires for immanence in the Islamic world have previously been considered as limited to devotees of the Sufi saints or the Shi'i Imams or their progeny.

CONTENTS:
Poetry; A note on transliteration; About the authors; About the project; Acknowledgements; Introduction: Anthropology, Islam and sainthood - Pedram Khosronejad; Chapter 1: The sanctity of Karbala in Shiite thought - Khalid Sindawi; Chapter 2: Pilgrimages to the Iraqi 'Atabat from Qajar era Iran - Tomoko Morikawa; Chapter 3: Listening, non-knowledge and the auditory body: Understanding Sufi zikr ritual and sama as sites of aesthetic experience - Seema Golestaneh; Chapter 4: Between history and memory: A case study of a martyr mausoleum in north of Iran - Morvarid Ayaz; Chapter 5: Innovation in the tradition of saint veneration in Turkey during the twentieth century: Venerating Nasreddin Hodja in Aksehir - Hakki Gurkas; Chapter 6: The revival of Shia rituals in Iraq since the fall of Saddam Hussein's regime: Permanence and evolution - Pierre-Jean Luizard; Index.

Pedram Khosronejad is a Research Fellow in the Department of Social Anthropology at the University of St Andrews and the editor of several publications: The Art and Material Culture of Iranian Shi'ism (2011) and Unburied Memories: The Politics of Bodies, and the Material Culture of Sacred Defense Martyrs in Iran (2011).

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Notes on the Cognitive Texture of an Oral Mind

Kitawa, a Melanesian Culture

Giancarlo M. G. Scoditti, with a foreword by Pierre Maranda

This book marks the culmination of Giancarlo M.G. Scoditti's renowned series of publications on the cultural production of the northern Massim island of Kitawa, Papua New Guinea. It explores how the Nowau 'creators of images' conceive of the way their artistic compositions come about - sketching Kitawan cognitive philosophy and aesthetic practice. Describing how for them images grow like the loops of the Nautilus shell - one of nature's prominant demonstrations of the logarithmic spiral and the golden section - Scoditti's analysis of Kitawan cognitive and artistic principles resonates with Lévi-Strauss's work on myth and Kant's notion of the mental schema, and makes a ground-breaking contribution to our understanding of the 'oral mind'.

Giancarlo M. G. Scoditti is Professor of Ethnology at the Department of Classical Archaeology and History of Ancient Art, University of Urbino in Italy. Since 1973 he has carried out extensive field research on both Kitawa and Kiriwina Islands (Milne Bay Province, Papua New Guinea), focusing his attention on the verbal as well as non-verbal oral expressions of those cultures. He began by analysing the aesthetic and symbolic meaning of kula canoes' prowboards to their carvers. Then he worked on poetic formulas chanted on different occasions by inhabitants of Kitawa. Currently his researches concern the analysis of interpretations of the text of the myth of foundation narrated by the leaders of the four clans living on Kitawa and Kiriwina island.

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Anthropology Matters Vol. 6

The Shark Warrior of Alewai

A Phenomenology of Melanesian Identity

Deborah Van Heekeren

The first anthropological monograph published on the Vula'a people of south-eastern Papua New Guinea, The Shark Warrior of Alewai considers oral histories and Western historical documents that cover a period of more than 200 years in the light of an ethnography of contemporary Christianity.

Van Heekeren's phenomenology of Vula'a storytelling reveals how the life of one man, the Shark Warrior, comes to contain the identity of a people. Drawing on the philosophy of Martin Heidegger, she goes on to establish the essential continuities that underpin the reproduction of Vula'a identity, and to demonstrate how these give a distinctive form to Vula'a responses to historical change. In an approach that brings together the fields of anthropology, history and philosophy, the book questions conventional anthropological categories of exchange, gender and kinship, as well as the problematic dichotomization of myth and history, to argue for an anthropology grounded in ontology.

CONTENTS:
Preface and acknowledgements; Introduction; Chapter 1 - The people who fish; Chapter 2 - The life and death of Kila Wari; Chapter 3 - Of genealogy and place; Chapter 4 - The problem of history; Chapter 5 - The coming to be of Vula'a exchange; Chapter 6 - Of body, being and food; Chapter 7 - Singing for being; Chapter 8 - From myth as narrative to mythic being; Conclusion - Identity from end to end; Bibliography

Deborah Van Heekeren is a lecturer in Anthropology at Macquarie University Sydney. Her research interests include the cosmology, myth, history and Christianity of the Vula'a of Papua New Guinea.

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Made in Oceania

Social movements, cultural heritage and the state in the Pacific

Edvard Hviding and Knut M. Rio

Throughout the Pacific, cultural heritage is both a powerful idiom in post-colonial state-making, and a potent mobilizing force in diverse grassroots social movements, many of which have been misunderstood as 'cargo-cults' or 'inventions of tradition' in anthropological analyses. This collection recognizes cultural heritage as a ground for creativity and experimentation with social forms, and pin-points both the conflicting values at play and their potentially subversive power. Describing key social processes in Hawaii, Tahiti, Pohnpei, Fiji, Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, Papua New Guinea and Australia, it explores alternative ways of configuring authority and organizing the state, as well as highlighting the potential in local social movements to influence culture and politics at the national level.

Taking the pulse of important contemporary social movements in the region, this volume is key for understanding the development of the modern nation-state in the Pacific.

Edvard Hviding is Professor and Head of Social Anthropology at the University of Bergen, Norway, and Director of the Bergen Pacific Studies research group. He is an Adjunct Professor of anthropology at James Cook University, Australia and an Honorary Fellow of the Cairns Institute.

Knut M. Rio is Professor of Social Anthropology at the University of Bergen, Norway, and is responsible for the ethnographic collections at the Bergen University Museum.

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The End of Anthropology?

Holger Jebens and Karl-Heinz Kohl

Decolonisation, modernisation, globalisation, the crisis of representation, and the 'cultural turn' in neighbouring disciplines have unsettled anthropology to such an extent that the field's foundations, the subjects of its study as well as its methods and concepts, appear to be eroded.

It is now time to take stock and either abandon anthropology as a fundamentally untenable or superfluous project, or to set it on more solid foundations. In this volume some of the world's leading anthropologists - including Vincent Crapanzano, Maurice Godelier, Ulf Hannerz, and Adam Kuper - do just that. Reflecting on how to meet the manifold institutional, theoretical, methodological, and epistemological challenges to the field, as well as on the continued, if not heightened, importance of anthropology in a world where diversity and cultural difference are becoming ever more important economically, politically, and legally, they set upon the task of reconstructing anthropology's foundations and firming up its stance vis-à-vis these challenges.

With a backward glance at earlier predictions of the demise of anthropology, the essays present a confident account of the future of the discipline. Defining in clear terms what it is that anthropologists do, a well-chosen group of distinguished contributors confront the diversity and internal distinctions that characterize the field, weigh the seriousness of the trend toward interdisciplinary studies in the human sciences, and redefine the strengths of the anthropological mode of knowledge production.

Shirley Lindenbaum, Professor Emerita, City University of New York

CONTENTS:
Introduction - Karl-Heinz Kohl; 1: The crisis of anthropology - Holger Jebens; 2: The original sin of anthropology - Adam Kuper; 3: What ends with the end of anthropology? - Patricia Spyer; 4: The end of anthropology, again: on the future of an in/discipline - John Comaroff; 5: The end - the ends - of anthropology - Vincent Crapanzano; 6: Whatever happened to the spirit of adventure - Signe Howell; 7: Transitions: notes on sociocultural anthropology's present and its transnational potential - Andre Gingrich; 8: Diversity is our business - Ulf Hannerz; 9: In today's world, anthropology is more important than ever - Maurice Godelier; 10: The end - Mark Münzel; Contributors; Index

Holger Jebens is Senior Research Fellow at the Frobenius Institute and Managing Editor of Paideuma.

Karl-Heinz Kohl holds the chair of Cultural Anthropology at the Goethe University of Frankfurt am Main and is Director of the Frobenius Institute.

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A Northern Chin Tradition

Architecture, History, Life, Death and Feasting in Sukte-Kamhau

S. Khup Chin Pau

In this volume we are provided with a unique insider's perspective on the rich culture of the northern Chin area of Burma/Myanmar by S. Khup Chin Pau, who, as grandson of Chief Hau Chin Khup, grew up amongst the feasts of merit and clan funerals of Kamhau chiefs at the height of their power and opulence. His account of the historical traditions of the area gains further depth and verisimilitude from exclusive access to rare documents and recordings of previous generations, including the personal notebooks of Pu Vung Za Kham, Secretary to Chief Pum Za Mang.

Beginning with the traditional architecture of the Kamhaus, Sukte and Siyins of the Northern Chin Hills, the book moves on to present the Sukte story in both poetry and song, and a local history of Sukte-Kamhau. The Sukte-Kamhau customs pertaining to the entirety of the life-cycle are described, including coming of age, courtship, marriage, the birth of a baby and the politically important communal feasts, funerals and memorials. A direct representation of peerless primary material, this highly illustrated work presents a wealth of data that will constitute a valuable resource for local people and scholars alike.

S. Khup Chin Pau served as a career officer in the Myanmar Army Corps of Engineers for 27 years, retiring as a major in 1989. He now lives in Singapore with his wife, Rita Man Lam Cing, who is the granddaughter of Chief Pum Za Mang.

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Every Day's a Festival!

Diversity on Show

Edited by Susanne Küchler, László Kürti and Hisham Elkadi

Despite their ubiquity and cultural prominence, the academic study of arts
festivals has long been neglected. The burgeoning festivals industry is,
however, firmly embedded in both the arts funding and weekly calendar
of European cities, and there is no doubt that festivals are fast becoming a
defining feature of urban life in the twenty-first century. An assessment of
their nature and impact is more pressing than ever before.

The contributors to this volume explore the modern urban festival and
the difference it makes to the experience and management of diversity in
the city. Their research reveals an unsettling coupling of the celebration of
local diversity with institutional amnesia, in which the memory of a festival
hardly ever outlasts its funding. This book documents a key phenomenon
of our time, the supplanting of community-based remembering with the
repetitive structures of events whose historic and interpretative depth is
lost amid a spiraling velocity of 'festivalization'.

Susanne Küchler is Professor of Anthropology at University College London, Department of Anthropology and one of the scientific leaders for the Sustainable Development in a Diverse World (SUSDIV) project funded by the Sixth Network of Excellence (NoE) Programme.

László Kürti teaches at the University of Miskolc, and the Karoli Gaspar University in Budapest, Hungary and has conducted fieldwork in North America, Romania and Hungary. From 2001 to 2006 he served as the Secretary of the European Association of Social Anthropologists.

Hisham Elkadi, also a scientific leader for the SUSDIV project funded by the Sixth Network of Excellence Programme, is Head of The School of Architecture and Building at Deakin University in Melbourne, Australia.

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Anthropology Matters Vol. 5

Mutuality and Empathy

Self and Other in the Ethnographic Encounter

Edited by Anne Sigfrid Grønseth and Dona Lee Davis

Focusing on issues of empathy and mutuality, and self and other, as experienced in the everyday challenges of doing participant-observation fieldwork, this volume makes a significant contribution to rethinking the experiential and conceptual construction of the field. The contributors adopt a critical and self reflexive approach that goes beyond issues of voice and representation raised by early postmodern anthropology, to grapple with issues concerning the nature of knowledge transmission that lie at the very heart of the ethnographic effort. They explore how multiple modes of attending, awareness and sense making can shape the ethnographic process. Of note are those unanticipated, less palpable forms of communication that are peripheral to or transcend more formalized and structured research methods and agendas. Among these are empathy, intuition, somatic modes of attention and/or embodied knowledge and identification, as well as, shared sensory experiences and aesthetics. By the elaboration of such concepts the volume as a whole offers a substantial elaboration of a phenomenological approach.

Anne Sigfrid Grønseth is an Associate Professor at University College of Lillehammer, Norway, where she directs the Research Unite of Health, Culture and Identity. Her research interest include migration, health, identity and a current project on yoga.

Dona Lee Davis has taught Anthropology at the University of South Dakota and the University of Tromsø. Her areas of research and publication include women's health, psychological and medical anthropology, human sexuality and North Atlantic fishing communities. She is currently working on a book about identical twins.

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Anthropology Matters Vol. 4

Sin, Sex and Stigma

A Pacific Response to HIV and AIDS

Lawrence James Hammar

What happens to national HIV programmes when Science and Religion collide and when both ignore the setting of most infections: in or on the way to marriage?

HIV and AIDS are serious social and public-health problems in Papua New Guinea. After long delays, community-, business- and faith-based organizations have launched an impressive multi-sectoral response. But health-service systems are overwhelmed by the need for HIV antibody testing and counselling, and for treatment with antiretrovirals. Foreign notions of epidemiology, such as 'sex worker', 'risk group' and 'rural/urban', have gained traction despite massive empirical evidence as to their inapplicability. Each of these has fuelled, rather than confronted, the gendered contradictions of marriage and sexuality in Papua New Guinea. Quantitative approaches have fetishized numbers at the expense of enabling changes in social-structure.

Part One of Sin, Sex and Stigma draws upon ethnography, public discourse and archival data to critique public-health policy and epidemiological modelling. Christian-inflected sex-negativity and anti-condom rhetoric are shown to have stymied prevention initiatives. Part Two enlists experts in antiretroviral therapy, sex work activism and ethnography in dialogues focused on strengthening the national response to HIV and AIDS.

A 'hot glow of anger' compelled Lawrence Hammar to write this fiery account of the many factors preventing successful HIV and AIDS interventions in Papua New Guinea. Drawing on his extensive research experience on sexuality and sex work, on cultural and Christian ideologies, and on outrageous stories of denial, abuse, and stigma, Hammar paints a rich and devastating portrait of the history of AIDS in PNG. Read it and weep. Lawrence Hammar is an inspiring reminder for AIDS scholars and activists everywhere of the differences committed social scientists can make to the way things are done.

Leslie Butt, Dept. of Pacific and Asian Studies, University of Victoria

A bold, accessible, and rousingly angry book. Hammar's examination of the problematic reliance on conventional epidemiological categories - such as high risk groups - is powerful, as is his analysis of the ways in which questionable HIV prevalence and behavioral data become privileged over thorough ethnographic research. Hammar's investigation of gendered violence, sexual networking, and the dissemination of condom misinformation is unflinching.

Lawrence Hammar conducted ethnographic fieldwork from 1990-2 on Daru island, capital of Papua New Guinea's Western Province, and worked alongside Papua New Guinean colleagues from 2003-6 during a nationwide study of HIV, AIDS, STDs, and sexual health and behaviour. His most recent project is 'Positive Research For Positive People: strengthening HIV social research capacity in Fiji', working in tandem with the Pacific Island AIDS Foundation and the Fijian Positive Network. He also teaches anthropology and sexuality courses throughout the state of Ohio.

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Villagers and the City

Melanesian Experiences of Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea

Edited by Michael Goddard

Since Papua New Guinea's Independence in the 1970s, Port Moresby has been transformed from a colonial administrative centre to a distinctively Melanesian city. However visitors often shun the capital, their perceptions coloured by unsympathetic media accounts of violent crime and unchecked corruption. Instead they seek the 'real' Papua New Guinea - traditionally oriented and reassuringly parochial - beyond its boundaries.

In this book, experts from the fields of anthropology, ethnomusicology and human ecology seek to represent 'Mosbi' as Papua New Guineans experience it. They augment the urban focus of the book with knowledge of the rural societies from which the contemporary inhabitants come. Considering groups of migrants, long-term residents and the traditional landholders of the territory on which it has grown, the contributors offer intimately informed perspectives on the vibrant, dynamic, exciting, hybrid environment that is 'Mosbi'. They argue that it needs to be recognised as the real Papua New Guinea, and that its inhabitants need to be understood not as caricatures of unemployed criminals on the one hand and as corrupt elites on the other, but as modern Melanesians creatively adapting to the exigencies of urban living.

Michael Goddard is a Research Associate at Macquarie University, Australia. He is the author of The Unseen City: Anthropological Perspectives on Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea, and Substantial Justice: An Anthropology of Village Courts in Papua New Guinea.

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Other Voices, Other Eyes Vol. 1

Just Leave the Tree-Trunk Alone

A Magical-Realistic Journey Through the Land of the Bawòng in the Congo

Toon van Buren

‘Just leave the tree-trunk alone, the beetle is crawling out.’

In 1967, Toon van Buren went as a missionary-sponsored anthropologist to the Bawòng of the Congo, neighbours of the Lele made famous by Mary Douglas, initially to investigate her contentions about the ‘non-religious’ reasons for the missions’ success there. Like Douglas, he found his encounter there to be the most important of his life

Stalled by the prospect of presenting beliefs he could not believe to be true, van Buren’s outlook was changed by his own authentic 'Bawòng’ experience: a dream in which he was visited by the tribal chief and his wife.

Simultaneously attempting to do justice to both European and Bawòng points of view, and incorporating stories from over half the inhabitants of his host village, this is a magical-realistic travel story through the land of the Bawòng from a man experiencing overlapping beliefs.

CONTENTS:
Part I: 1The assignment; Part II: 2 Jokomakári knew more about it; 3 Jokomakári’s wives; 4 Mpeemp, the Lord’s brother; 5 Departure from Paradise; Part III: 6 In Paradise after the fall; 7 Because of sin death came into the world; 8 How Kumantsempe knew it; 9 Imbwangkain went too far; 10 My father, are you there? Part IV: 11 Houtekiet; 12 The song of the tree-trunk; 13 The lie of a child from far away; 14 The last finger exercises; Part V:15 The case van Rompaay; 16 Epilogue; Appendix: Song of welcome for a Tribal Chief, the Guardian-of-the-village; Index of persons; Acknowledgement.

Toon van Buren studied philosophy and theology in Rome and Nijmegen, and was ordained a priest before leaving for mission work in the Congo (19668). On his return, he worked for the next 35 years as a (married) Roman Catholic pastor in psychiatric institutions, the last six years as a zen-meditation teacher. Currently, he meditates with zen adepts in a former monastery, ‘Gods Werkhof ’, in Werkhoven, the Netherlands.

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Disasters, Relief and the Media

Jonathan Benthall

The mass media have immense power, in their reporting of disasters, both natural and man-made, to stir the consciences of prosperous Westerners as well as to manipulate the perception of poverty and deprivation for political ends. For the relief agencies, the media present both unparalleled opportunities to raise money and acute ethical dilemmas when fund-raising priorities, developmental strategies and educational values conflict.

In 1993, this was the first book-length study of the representation of disasters in the media and of the marketing methods used by major relief agencies. In the preface to this new paperback edition which reviews the major developments in aid and in the media since the early 1990s, Jonathan Benthall contests the view of some commentators that the emergence of new technologies  the Internet and the cellphone  has radically changed the balance of power between the aid system and afflicted populations. He develops his original theme to argue that a ‘stable system’ is in place, whereby representations of misery in the South are exported to the North as consumables which are continuously reciprocated by flows of humanitarian aid. When the allotted role of Third World victimhood is repudiated  for instance, by migrant workers  the North sets up stern political barriers.

‘Essential reading for those involved in aid and development as well as for others interested in cultural studies’ (Oxfam Journal)

‘…a genuinely original work that creates a context for the nightly parade of keening refugees and pot-bellied infants through our living rooms.’ (Boyd Tonkin, New Statesman & Society).

CONTENTS:
Preface to the 2010 edition; Acknowledgements; Abbreviations; Introduction; The International Response to Disasters in the 1990s; Ambivalence within the Agencies; Parables of Disaster; The Cultural Style of NGOs; Images and Narratives of Disaster Relief; Conclusion: Disasters, Relief and the Media; Notes; Index.

Jonathan Benthall is co-author of The Charitable Crescent: Politics of Aid in the Muslim World, and was formerly Director of the Royal Anthropological Institute and Editor of Anthropology Today.

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Anthropology Matters Vol. 3

The Potters and Pottery of Miravet

Production, Marketing and Consumption of Pottery in Catalonia

Rob van Veggel

This rich account of potters in a southern Catalan village traces the history of pottery production and marketing and the responses of the potters to changing contexts of consumption. By juxtaposing the local, micro-history of a small group of producers (numbering no more than fifty people) with that of Spain’s changing economic and social climate, the author presents a local perspective of producers as affected by and acting upon global developments, ultimately localizing the European transition to one single integrated market economy.

Maintaining a dual focus on subject and object, and thereby combining social and material history, this book demonstrates how physical transformations in the pottery resulted from and affected its role in the social relations people formed as they produced, marketed and consumed it.

CONTENTS:
Chapter 1 Introduction; Chapter 2 Potters and muleteers; Chapter 3 Potters and consumers during the period of the muleteers; Chapter 4 Selling to wholesalers and shop-owners; Chapter 5 New techniques, new products, new clients, new consumers; Chapter 6 Potters and their clients  wholesalers and shop-owners; Chapter 7 The exchanges at the workshops; Chapter 8 Potters and consumers in the early 1990s; Chapter 9 The central themes.

Rob van Veggel obtained his PhD in anthropology from the University of Chicago and has since been applying his insights into material culture in product development research, marketing, brand strategy and governmental policies.

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The Four Seasons of the U'wa

A Chibcha Ritual Ecology in the Columbian Andes

Ann Osborn

A beleaguered indigenous population came to the attention of the world in 1997 by threatening mass suicide in a last-ditch attempt to protect their ancestral lands (overlying possible oil deposits) from invasion by outsiders.

The U’wa (formerly known as the Tunebo)  a Chibchan-speaking group living on the eastern slopes of the Andes in NE Colombia  are documented in Ann Osborn’s pioneering study, here published in English for the first time. She introduces us to the U’wa on their own terms, enabling us to understand them from their own perspective, to place them squarely within the unique ecological setting that is a fundamental part of their being and to appreciate what might motivate them to contemplate such drastic action in the face of an external threat.

The life-sustaining annual round of ceremonies described here were undertaken not only for themselves but also on behalf of outsiders: ‘If we did not chant, the world would wear out … it would come down … we chant for the Whites as well, so that they can continue living in their world…’.

The contrast between this philosophy and that of our oil-hungry world provides timely cause for reflection.

Introduction by Stephen Hugh-Jones, emeritus Professor of Anthropology, University of Cambridge.

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Body Arts and Modernity

Edited by Elizabeth Ewart and Michael O'Hanlon

What happens to body arts when these aesthetic practices assume fresh significance in the context of modernity?

In many parts of the indigenous world, the realm of body arts has become an arena for innovation, debate, revival and repression under the conditions of modernity. Among some groups, formerly suppressed ‘traditions’ of body arts have recently been revived. Elsewhere, body arts have been the means for creating or renovating identities in response to a developing international tourist market and in the light of novel technologies of representation, such as photography and film.

The contributions to this volume draw together ideas emerging from the anthropology of the body, the western interest in body ornamentation of the ‘Other’, and the recent revival of specific body arts such as tattooing and piercing.

Drawing on ethnographic case studies from Amazonia, Indonesia, Africa, Melanesia and Polynesia, this volume shows how bodily presentation plays a fundamental role in contemporary identity politics in tension with encompassing national and global stereotypes, which may in turn both constrain and empower local traditions.

Anthropology Matters Vol. 1

Of Alien Kings and Perpetual Kin

Contradiction and Ambiguity in Ruwund (Lunda) Symbolic Thought

Manuela Palmeirim

Of Alien Kings and Perpetual Kin presents a detailed understanding and analysis of the ideology of kingship among the Aruwund (Lunda) of southern Democratic Republic of the Congo. In doing so the text is drawn into addressing a range of important regional themes: the debate on the concept of the 'culture hero' in central African traditions of state formation; the system of 'perpetual kinship'; issues of hierarchy; and the symbolic use of space in royal ritual. All these lead to an analysis that stresses the fluidity and ambiguity of symbolic thought. In this, this innovative work questions the heuristic and theoretical validity of the concept of 'opposition' as used in theoretical models applied to the study of symbolism in which terms are self-contained and mutually exclusive.

'a major ethnographic contribution ... Palmeirim is remarkably successful in her ambition to present the Ruwund epic as a story of exceptional complexity'

Johan Pottier (School of Oriental and African Studies), Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute (N.S.) 14

NEW IN PAPERBACK! - Anthropology Matters Vol. 2

Living with Things

Ridding, Accommodation, Dwelling

Nicky Gregson

Living with Things provides an account of consumption in terms of its centrality to our dwelling practices. Its focus is on the home, particularly on the movement of people and things within and through it in everyday habitation.

Here dwelling is seen as an activity, as doing things with and to the things to hand around us. Being ‘at home’ is achieved through living amongst things, as well as amongst people and other non-human presences, such as pets and gardens. Being at home is achieved through what we do with objects, the things that are acquired and stored, that linger around in our homes, sometimes for decades, and which we may eventually get rid of. These ordinary things make dwelling structures accommodating accommodations; they make them homes.

Based primarily on a former coal-mining village in North-east England, this book explores practices of inhabitation, from moving in or being modernised, to the daily accommodation of sleep and children. It provides a demonstration of what happens to consumption research when it ‘comes home’ and is positioned not in sites of exchange but within the home and in households.

Medical Anthropology in Europe

Teaching and Doctoral Research

Elisabeth Hsu and Doreen Montag

Medical Anthropology is the fastest growing field in anthropology. Over the last three decades it has developed a strong academic and applied importance, both in North America and Europe. This has led to the establishment of a specific degree in medical anthropology at some universities, and to a specialization within general anthropological teaching or within the medical curriculum at others.

This publication provides a handbook to existing programmes at undergraduate and postgraduate level, with the aim of making this information available to a wide public. As a guide to medical anthropology programmes in Europe, it is primarily designed for students who are looking for suitable training, but it will also interest professionals who are looking for expertise in the field. It provides information on ongoing doctoral research all over Europe, and indicates new directions in medical anthropology. It is the first handbook of its kind.

CONTENTS
AUSTRIA - Department of Social and Cultural Anthropology, Faculty of Human and Social Sciences, University of Vienna; Ethnomedicine Unit, Institute for the History of Medicine, Centre for Public Health, Medical University of Vienna; CROATIA - Institute for Anthropological Research and Institute of Social Sciences Ivo Pilar , Zagreb; DENMARK - Department of Anthropology and Ethnography, Institute of Anthropology, Archaeology and Linguistics, University of Aarhus; Institute of Anthropology, University of Copenhagen; Institute of Public Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Southern Denmark; FINLAND - Cultural and Social Anthropology, University of Helsinki; FRANCE - Department of Human Ecology and Anthropology, University of Aix-Marseilles; Doctoral Training in Social Anthropology and Interdisciplinary Research Programme, School of Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences, Paris; GERMANY - Institute for Ethnology/Social Anthropology, Free University Berlin; Department of Anthropology, South Asia Institute, University of Heidelberg; GREAT BRITAIN - Department of Social Medicine, University of Bristol; International Medical Anthropology Program, School of Social Sciences and Law, Brunel University; Department of Social Anthropology, University of Cambridge; Department of Anthropology, University of Durham; Social Anthropology, School of Social and Political Studies, University of Edinburgh; London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (LSHTM); Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology, University of Oxford; School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), London; Department of Anthropology, University of Sussex; Department of Anthropology, University College London (UCL); Behavioural and Social Sciences, Division of Medicine, University College London (UCL); HUNGARY - Department of Medical Anthropology, Institute of Behavioral Sciences, Semmelweis University, Budapest; ITALY - Department of Linguistic and Oriental Studies, University of Bologna; Department of Epistemology and Hermeneutics of Education, University of Milan; Department Man and Environment , Anthropology Section, University of Perugia; Department of Anthropological, Archeological and Historical Sciences, University of Turin; NETHERLANDS - Medical Anthropology Unit, Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences, University of Amsterdam; NORWAY - Department of General Practice and Community Medicine, University of Oslo; POLAND - Institute of Ethnology and Cultural Anthropology, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznan; SPAIN - Department of Anthropology, Philosophy and Social Work, University Rovira i Virgili,Tarragona; SWEDEN - Department of Social Anthropology, Gothenburg University; Department of Social Anthropology, University of Stockholm; SWITZERLAND - Institute of Social Anthropology, University of Basle; Institute of Social Anthropology, University of Berne; The Anthropology of Health, Institute of Anthropology and Sociology, University of Lausanne; Institute of Social Anthropology, University of Zurich.

Elisabeth Hsu is University Lecturer in Medical Anthropology, and Doreen Montag is completing a D.Phil. in Social Anthropology, both at the Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology, University of Oxford.

Mining and Indigenous Lifeworlds in Australia and Papua New Guinea

Edited by Alan Rumsey and James Weiner

This volume gives a vital and unique insight into the effects of mining and other forms of resource extraction upon the indigenous peoples of Australia and Papua New Guinea. Based on extensive fieldwork with the people concerned, it offers a comparative focus on indigenous cosmologies and their articulation or disjunction with the forces of 'development'.

A central dimension of contrast is that Australia as a 'settled' continent has had wholesale dispossession of Aboriginal land, while in Papua New Guinea more than 95% of the land surface remains unalienated from customary ownership. Less obviously, there are also important similarities owing to:

a shared form of land title (largely unheard of outside Australia and Papua New Guinea) in which the state retains ownership of underground resources;

the manner in which Western law has been used in both countries to define and codify customary land tenure;

an emphasis on the reproductive imagery of minerals, petroleum and extraction processes employed by Aborigines and Papua New Guineans;

and some surprising parallels in the ways that social identities on either side of the Arafura Sea have traditionally been grounded in landscape.

These studies are essential reading for all scholars involved in assessing the effects of resource extraction in Third World and Fourth World settings. Their distinctive contribution lies in their penetrating study of the forms of indigenous socio-cultural response to multinational companies and Western forms of governance and law.

'The writing is new and interesting. The essays mark out new ideas in seemingly effortless abundance. . . In sum - buy it, read it, I think you'll agree that its one of the really interesting books of the year.'

CONTENTS
1 Introduction: Depositings, James F. Weiner; 2 The iron furnace of Birrinydji, Ian McIntosh; 3 The Mount Kare python: Huli myths and gendered fantasies of agency, Holly Wardlow; 4 Who and what is a landowner? Mythology and marking the ground in a Papua New Guinea mining project, Dan Jorgensen; 5 Continuity and identity: Mineral development, land tenure and 'ownership' among the northern Mountain Ok, Don Gardner; 6 Land, stories and resources: Some impacts of large-scale resource exploitation on Onabasulu lifeworlds, T.M. Ernst; 7 The politics of petroleum extraction and royalty distribution at Lake Kutubu, Bill F. Sagir; 8 The Old Airforce Road: Myth and mining in north-east Arnhem Land, Ian Keen; 9 Changing views of place and time along the Ok Tedi, Stuart Kirsch; 10 Poisoning the rainbow: Mining, pollution and indigenous cosmology in Far North Queensland, Veronica Strang; 11 Mining, land claims and the negotiation of indigenous interests: Research from the Queensland Gulf country and the Pilbara region of Western Australia, David Trigger and Michael Robinson; 12 Development, rationalisation, and sacred sites: Comparative perspectives on Papua New Guinea and Australia, Francesca Merlan; References; Index.

Alan Rumsey is a Senior Fellow in the Department of Anthropology and James Weiner a Visiting Fellow in the Resource Management in Asia-Pacific Project, both in the Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, Australian National University.

Commons and Borderlands

Working Papers on Interdisciplinarity, Accountability and the Flow of Knowledge

Marilyn Strathern

In Commons and Borderlands a leading social anthropologist examines early twenty-first-century interests in interdisciplinarity, with particular attention to the conjunction of science and society. Interdisciplinary practice has become well entrenched in any number of scientific disciplines, or disciplines from the humanities or from social science for that matter. This does not deter current rhetoric which sees new opportunities in new combinations of interests. One arresting strand is the promise that in a strong form - transdisciplinarity - 'society' might thereby be brought into 'science'. Marilyn Strathern’s questioning of these processes addresses the challenge that notions of ownership pose to the expected flow of knowledge. As is fitting for a consideration of the flow and transformational properties of knowledge, the contents of this collection are knowingly designated 'working papers', left as open, unfinished statements to highlight their future and the work they may still do. They are designed to inspire debate, and publication will coincide with a Cambridge seminar series on Social Property at which many of these challenges will be rehearsed and articulated.

CONTENTS
PREFACE; INTRODUCTION - In crisis mode : a comment on interculturality; CHAPTER ONE - Knowledge on its travels: Dispersal and divergence in the make-up of communities; CHAPTER TWO - Commons and borderland;.CHAPTER THREE - Who owns academic knowledge? CHAPTER FOUR - Accountabilty across disciplines.ENDNOTE Re-describing society.

Marilyn Strathern is William Wyse Professor of Social Anthropology, University of Cambridge.

Rationales of Ownership

Transactions and Claims to Ownership in Contemporary Papua New Guinea

Edited by Lawrence Kalinoe and James Leach

What constitutes a resource, and how do people make claims on them? In the context of a burgeoning discourse of property, these are vital questions. Rationales of Ownership offers conceptual clarification in the context of material, intellectual and cultural resources in Papua New Guinea. The volume is a result of a major research project headed by Marilyn Strathern and Eric Hirsch, and brings together contributions from social anthropology and law. The approaches demonstrated, and conclusions reached, build upon recent understandings developed within Melanesian anthropology, but have far wider significance. The first publication sold out in Papua New Guinea due to the relevance of its approach and contents to lawyers and policy makers in that country. It is here made available to a wider readership, particularly those teaching courses on resource development, cultural and intellectual property, contemporary Pacific societies, environmental degradation, and property itself.

'. . .a unique contribution to the discipline's voice in contemporary global debates. . .this volume represents the best of the comparative, ethnographic tradition providing critical insight into difference and similarity on issues that entangle us all in various degrees of responsibility and care. It will be read by anthropologists, policy makers and all academic and non-academic students of what has come to be seen as the test area of the survival of cultural difference.'